Sunday, November 7, 2010

Is there quot;Mad Cowquot; disease (BSE) in southern Colorado? -

Earlier this month, multiple mutilated cattle carcasses were discovered near Los Vallejos, Colorado.Both the local sheriff s department and the rancher who owns the cows and property report that there are absolutely no signs of attack by human or animal - no tracks or even blood.Although largely suppressed by the American media, it is somewhat common knowledge (at least to anyone who cares to read up on such things) that Mad Cow disease (Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy -BSE for short- and it s human variant; Creutzfeldt�CJakob disease, or CJD) has become somewhat of a silent epidemic in this country. To the delight of Big Pharma, CJD may be masquerading in the brains of FDA-trusting Americans as Alzheimer s disease. The Center for Disease Control lists Alzheimer s as the 6th leading cause of death, and over 10 million baby boomers will develop the disease. Alzheimer s disease is projected to cost the already-strapped Medicare/Medicaid system nearly $20 trillion from 2010 - 2050, and affects nearly half of all Americans aged 85 and older.It has been documented in the past that such UFO mutilation cases are actually performed by highly trained military personnel who travel in black helicopters under cover of darkness and use a laser-like implement to cut into the flesh of these animals and remove organs for Laboratory observation to test for the presence of BSE. The extremely high heat of the precision cutting tools cauterizes the wound as the flesh is cut so that no blood is spilled. The helicopters and the cutting tools make it so that virtually no trace of these field surgeries remain.Even with much stricter food safety standards in place than what is currently common practice in the United States (including our regular ingestion of mechanically separated brain and spinal cord particles on nearly every cut of beef), over 10 million cattle are tested annually in the European Union... so why aren t Americans concerned about exactly what it is that we re eating??

Stories about militated cows in Colorado have been around since the 70 s. UFOs, government conspiracies and strange diseases have all been blamed over the years. In 40 years I have never seen a single one, and I live in a very remote, highly ranch driven part of the country.

If the government was trying to secretly test the animals for BSE, they could just take the entire carcass and cut out the organs at the test lab or helicopter base, without leaving a mutilated carcass or any other evidence at the scene.

Is the greyhound bus crowded? -

I am thinking about taking the greyhound bus and I want to know if the buses are crowded and if you have to get there early to get a good seat and stuff like that too. Tips would help too! Thanks so much for everything!

it really depends on where your headed. The times i ve been on they weren t crowded.Had my own seat. there s a lot of weird people xD. oh and no there s no free food. they sometimes stop at a fast food place. so take money.xD

Should i move to chicago? Advicee needed! plz? -

ok so, ima junior in hsmy dad got a job in illinois, he s letting my decide whether to move or noti really don t know what to decide.i live in an asian infested city, so the school is rly hard here, i see asians everywhere!i love my friends, i want to graduate from the school i would have been at for 4 yearsi also want to move at the same time because i know i would experience high school differently(im going to chicago either way after school)i want to meet new people and make new friends, but im worried that i wont be able to because everyone would know eachother already! I see the word chicago everywhere, so im guessing its a great place to live.i also dont like the people in my school, they are just mean stuck up b*****s, and i don t want to be here anymore, but i still want to for the reasons abovewhat do u guys think i should do?

Well, you say you don t like some of the people in your school which is already a great reason to move if your given the oppurtunity. Chicago is a great place to live in because the people happen to be nicer then in other cities *cough cough New York* at least when they re not killing eachother. Chicago also has great schools. I suggest you move here because Chicago is a very interesting city, and if you lived where you do now all your life then it would be great to have a little change.You say you see the word Chicago everywhere, what do you hear about it?

Where ever you go, you will have to meet new people. As far as the other person wrote, chicago has many different ethnic people. The schools in the suburbs are better than chicago, but there are other alternative schools in Chicago itself to choose from. It is hard to move when you are a JR in high school, but I knew someone that moved from NY city to chicago as a JR in high school and he adapted well.

I think you should. I was born in chicago and I love it here.There s lots of stuff to do, and we re really friendly.. haha.Oh and don t forget the pizza its the best (: haha.

First off I am disheartened by your use of the term asian infested city. That comes off as racist. In which case I would not move to Chicago because it is infested with many cultures including Polish, Mexican, Irish, Italian, Ukranian, many other Eastern European cultures, and many Central American Cultures. We also have a very renowned Chinatown. And Korea Town.Schools - much as I love Chicago as a city I am still nervous about sending my kids to a school there. There are good magnet schools but I don t know the system and one would have to demonstrate higher scholastic achievement to get in. I live in Glen Ellyn (German Culture) for its good schools and more affordable housing. Naperville, Elmhurst, and Evanston have good schools but also are more expensive.I hope that helps and I hope you ll be more considerate and careful with the terms you use. Best of luck to you.